Key events
Tom Price watch
Pollock can’t resist trying to pull Tom Price to the boundary, but only top-ends a catch. Worcs 5-1.
Covers coming off at Lord’s. Wheelbarrow and sandbags still in the middle so we’re still a while away I think.
Thanks to Guy Hornsby for this gem. Grant “it’s stupid” Flower not mincing his words.
Gloucestershire declare! Worcestershire need 301 to win!
Nice work! Well thwacked van Buuren (34 not out). Now then Worcs….
Finger on the pulse as ever, I’d missed this series of unfortunate events!
At Lord’s, a groundsman in shorts is sweeping the covers.
The future in a tweet:
In the first half hour round the grounds:
Somerset, oh Somerset, have lost three for four. Two for Bailey, one for Jimmy. Abell (again) rebuilds.
Kiran Carlson has passed 50 at The Riverside, but Glamorgan are going to struggle to avoid the follow on. Currently 291 behind, with just four wickets left.
A wicket for Waite at New Road – the Gloucs lead already 239, not sure I’d put money on Worcs batting it out this afternoon.
Yorkshire’s victory dash looks thwarted at the moment with heavy rain predicted till lunchtime. Not without Hope though.
Climate change threatens cricket. Blah, blah, blah.
Rain watch Two
Ignore my previous post: the west of England is good enough to be dry for now. Action at Sophia Gardens, but also New Road and Taunton.
Rain watch
Delayed starts at Canterbury, Lord’s, Taunton, Hove and New Road. That’s a full set apart from at Sophia Gardens, where they have taken to the sward.
Arrived at Lord’s to find the covers on and a delayed start. Drizzle rather than anything substantial. Thinking that when I write my blockbuster, all rights reserved by Hollywood, one of those big cream houses near Little Venice would be nice.
Saturday’s roundup
At a sun-dappled Lord’s, cherry tree blossom dangling over the ground, stacks of Panama hats in the MCC shop, Middlesex had one of their better days. They passed 200 for the second time in 2023, avoided the follow-on and picked up their first batting point of the season thanks to Ryan Higgins’s 53 plus support from the tail. Stuart Broad finished with four for 68 for Nottinghamshire.
At a sun-dappled Lord’s, cherry blossom dangling over the ground, stacks of Panama hats in the MCC shop, Middlesex had one of their better days. They passed 200 for only the second time in 2023, avoided the follow on and picked up their first batting point of the season thanks to Ryan Higgins’ 53 plus support from the tail.
An on-the-money Stuart Broad finished with four for 68, though after play he let his thoughts drift to the Ashes, and David Warner in particular. “He’s a world-class player, isn’t he?” said Broad.
“He’s been phenomenal for them across his 100 Test matches. He got a double hundred for them at the MCG. It’s quite surprising he’s still under pressure. We will always plan and spend our time working on him because we know if he gets it right, he can hurt us.”
There was also a twinkle of delight that the new delivery he’s been practising with Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne in mind, was coming out so well. “I’ve been working on this load-up with Kevin Shine to create more flow in my action,” Broad explained. “It was nice to see, the ball I’ve been working on coming to fruition.”
“My stock delivery will always be wobble seam trying to nip back on off stump, because I think that’s the most dangerous ball. But to those guys, I think dragging them across with away swing is important. So this action tweak is pretty much designed at those two, and it was good to see it really swinging away today.”
Elsewhere, Zak Crawley hit the accelerator at Canterbury, screeching to his first century for Kent since the 2020 Bob Willis Trophy. After playing out a cautious few overs before lunch, Crawley let loose, cutting ferociously, depositing Simon Harmer back over his head to reach 50, pulling him through midwicket to tick over to three figures, off 96 balls. He fell to Jamie Porter for 170, his highest first-class score for Kent. Harmer reeled his way through 31 overs in just over two sessions, pocketing four for 141 for Essex.
Northamptonshire collapsed to the eighth-heaviest defeat in their history, in two and a half days, losing to Hampshire by an innings and 270 runs. Their batsmen dropped like tired Christmas tree needles, 14 wickets falling in three hours as they were first dismissed for 149, then, following-on, 63. James Fuller finished Northants off in the first innings, with six for 37, Mohammad Abbas and Kyle Abbott gave them no chance in the second.
A delighted James Vince, whose Hampshire had fallen to a nine-wicket loss to Surrey, was buzzing: “A bounce back with a performance like that after defeat last week at the Oval, we did all we can. We’ve got a week off now, which will be good, and then another batch of three matches so if we can make sure we’re bang on it for those, and get some more good results, it takes us near enough halfway through the season where the table will take a bit more shape.”
A freak hamstring injury cut Lancashire’s Keaton Jennings off in his prime as he attempted to stuff another double-century into his daddy ton bag. He had to limp off with 189 chalked against his name, having tried and failed to carry on playing with a runner at a chilly Taunton.
Within nine balls Dane Vilas and Colin de Grandhomme followed and Lancashire’s runaway train first innings came to a halt with a lead of 113. There were three wickets each for a disciplined Lewis Gregory and Peter Siddle, and six catches for James Rew behind the stumps to go with his first-innings century. Somerset’s openers batted through till stumps, seeing off six overs from Jimmy Anderson in the gloom. “You have to pinch yourself when you’re playing guys you are used to seeing on TV,” said Tom Lammonby, “but it’s good to test yourself against the best.”
Heaters were rolled on to the pitch at New Road to dry the bowler’s run-ups after Friday’s deluge, but it did not distract Ajeet Dale who nipped out the final three Worcestershire wickets to finish with six for 41 – his first first-class five-wicket return. Chris Dent and James Bracey made half-centuries as Gloucestershire stretched their lead to 246, Josh Tongue taking all three wickets.
It was a promising day for Durham, but a mixed day for Marnus Labuschagne. He snaffled four for 81, career-best bowling figures, by bowling off-spin for the first time in a professional game; but was out for 17 as Glamorgan lost five wickets on a rainy day at Sophia Gardens. Earlier, Brydon Carse had hacked his way to a career-best 91 before Durham declared on 471 for nine.
Sprightly half-centuries for Adam Lyth and Shai Hope put a first victory of the season in touching distance for Yorkshire after Sussex had reduced them to 39 for three chasing 201 for victory. Sussex squandered a first-innings lead of 63 by being bowled out for 137, three wickets to Dom Bess.
Scores on the doors
DIVISION ONE
Canterbury: Kent 342-7 v Essex 451-5dec
Lord’s: Middlesex 274 v Nottinghamshire 364 and 158-6
The County Ground: Northamptonshire 149 and 63 v Hampshire 482-8dec Hampshire WIN by an innings and 270.
Taunton: Somerset 441 and 41-0 v Lancashire 554
DIVISION TWO
Sophia Gardens: Glamorgan 153-5 v Durham 471-9dec
Hove: Sussex 361 and 137 v Yorkshire 298 and 138-3 Yorkshire need 63 to win
New Road: Worcestershire 157 v Gloucestershire 231 and 172-3
Preamble
Good morning from a coffee shop somewhere on the way to Lord’s. I dived in because it was starting to rain, which may, or may not, be what you want to hear – depending on how you feel about Middlesex’s batting.
The good news is that the hedgehog Ali took to the rescue centre is skitting around happily in a cardboard box, the bad – that weather may generally spoil the rest of this round. The Met office top line: “unsettled and showery, turning colder.”
And to everyone doing the London marathon today – may the wind be with you!